Piecrust 101

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Easy as Pie

Making piecrust can leave a cook feeling like a magician. Combine flour, water, and butter with just a bit of sugar and salt and -- presto! -- the result is a tender, flaky pastry that elevates just about any filling. The trick, of course, is in the method -- a simple but precise series of steps that, through baking thousands of pies, our test-kitchen staff has trial-and-errored down to a science. When it comes to making pastry, it takes more than just words in a recipe to master the technique. Follow these visual cues for an easy, can't-miss crust.

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Freeze About Three-Quarters of the Butter

Refrigerate the rest. The frozen pieces stay chunky after being pulsed, creating steam pockets when baked (the key to flakiness); the refrigerated bits get worked into the pastry, giving it a tender texture.

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The Dough Should Look Like This When You Squeeze It

With this method, there is no guesswork for the amount of water. The dough should remain crumbly but come together when pressed. Don't pulse it so long that it forms a ball. If it does, it's overworked.

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The Processed Dough Should Resemble Uneven Crumbs

When you empty the mixture from the food processor out onto the plastic wrap, some pieces will be tiny, others will be in clumps. This is exactly what you want. You're on your way to a light, flaky crust.